I do, but itâs policy to not give them to humansâIâm not well educated on human anatomy, therefore itâs not safe to have humans digesting something that may not be safe for them.
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[Reader Request] Financier Cobbler | Mitsuru Kirijo | Persona 3Â
[Note: Not exactly sure how to calculate yield/abv for this kind of drink using the morgenthaler spreadsheet. gomenasorry]Â
This is the second specific reader request post for the blog and a very good friend of mine requested a drink based on the imperious empress and your close upperclassman in SEES, Mitsuru from Persona 3! This was actually a really interesting one to develop. I definitely felt like it had to have a little something eyecatching in the presentation, ideally a reddish element, but the truth is, drinks-wise, except for 5 really with the coffe shop, Persona games donât give you a ton to work with. This is why we do research, and why I was also very relieved -- and inspired -- by the discovery that in the seemingly infinite amount of Persona spinoff media, something about Mitsuruâs tastes is revealed; Specifically, a taste for fresh fruit and financier cake. Financier is a very refined cake that is deceptively simple when evaluated on its ingredients list; sugar, almond flour, browned butter, maybe sliced almond or a raspberry on top... something clicked in my head. The cobbler, traditionally made with about 3-4 ounces of lower-proof sherry, a little sugar, fruit, and a cornucopia of attractive garnishes, is much like a financier; you canât hide behind poor technique or imbalanced flavor. Their clarity is upfront, but reveals depth and nuance in a well made one. I think that also reflects Mitsuru, leading me to marry them into a drink she would enjoy. This did also give me the crazy challenge of making a baked good into a drink. Itâs early winter here, and so the concept came to me, of taking a really interesting way of infusing spirits with flavor and using it in a very unusual context. A few guides exist for butter-washed rum, in the context of making a hot buttered rum. Would it work in a cold drink, piled high with tiny jewels of ice and adornment?Â
Well, actually, I think its great. Â
3-5 Raspberries
1 half wheel slice orange, about as wide as your pinky
1 wedge lemon, about 1/4-1/3 of the fruit sliced lengthwise
2 fl oz or 60ml Browned Butter Washed Rum (see below)Â
.75 fl oz or 22.5ml AmarettoÂ
.25 fl oz or 7.5ml Demerara SyrupÂ
.25 fl oz or 7.5ml Orgeat
[If you donât have orgeat, just use a .5 ounce demerara syrup or other sugar syrup of your choice. The orgeat split just adds a bit more of a baked-good element]
In a mixing tin, combine the syrup(s) and fruit. Muddle them by firmly pressing them. You donât have to beat the crap out of them, but get them fairly squished. Add your rum and amaretto liqueur. Stir them together a little bit with a little cracked ice, since rum is higher proof than the traditional sherry the dilution wonât hurt.Â
At this point, I would have your glass prepared to receive. You can roll it, even shake it if you want, but I usually just kind of stir or swirl them together. Pour the whole thing into your glass. Then fill the glass -- this is a pilsner glass, which depending how much ice we use and the size of our citrus pieces gives us decent headroom -- with finely cracked/crushed/pebbled ice. Some people add a little ice before pouring it in, but I like the nice frosty pile of ice on top. You will serve with a straw. Stick that in now.Â
Garnishing time! Get her all nice and pretty. Use some more raspberries or other berries like strawberry slices if you have them, that other half of the orange wheel, a nice sprig of mint, and maybe a little dusting of powdered or caster sugar. As a final touch and nod to the financier cake, the admittedly completely decorative but charming arrangement of sliced almonds on top completes the look. The over-the-top garnishes of the modern Bloody Mary are really just the new take on the 19th century luxury of a glass covered in fresh fruit, sugar and mint, filled with the opulence of all that shining ice. Truly a drink fit for an empress.Â
Is this a lengthy process, that requires a fair bit of attentiveness and some prepwork? Yes. Is it worth it? Honestly, I think it is. Itâs a really unique, delicious long drink. But I mean, if you play Persona games I think you can master this, too. According to howlongtobeat, Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 3 takes almost 90 hours to beat! You could make batches and batches of these in that time! Speaking of,Â
Below the cut you will find the guidance on creating roughly 1 bottle of Brown Butter-washed Rum
Brown Butter-washed Rum:Â
You will needÂ
-A Bottle of Rum. Ideally something not overly funky or grassy, so no super-firey rums, no Agricole or Barbancourt which are made of cane juice and have those vegetal flavors, DO NOT USE âSPICED RUMâ . Appleton Estate Signature or Appleton Estate Reserve 8 are both great bottles for this. I think something between about 5 and 10 years of age, not overproof, and not filtered is good. Real McCoy 5, El Dorado 5, I think are both great, thereâs literally so many rums if you want more information on rum I can recommend you books about rum. but also, this is up to your tastes, Iâm not the boss of you except for the SPICED RUM WARNING. IâM SERIOUS. DONâT DO IT. In most countries a standard bottle is sold as a âfifthâ; 750ml. in some countries you will find 70cl(700ml) bottles more common. either is fine AS LONG AS THEY ARE NOT A BOTTLE OF SAILOR JERRY OR KRAKEN OR CAPTAIN MORGAN. I AM SERIOUS ABOUT THE SPICED RUM THING.Â
-About a half pound or 250g Unsalted Butter. I used Kerrygold Irish Butter. Unsalted is important. I have not tried this with cultured butters, IDK, but unsalted. If your butter only comes in like a 226grm block, thatâs fine. the difference in proportion here isnt actually that major if its a matter of a few grams or milliliters.Â
âBut! that is too much! this drink only calls for 2 oz!â I hear you. But, this isnât going to rapidly degrade. You donât even need to fridge it. And you can always make a hot buttered rum with it, all of the buttery flavor, none of the having to make a weird batter, its literally just adding this and a sweetener/spice accents to taste and hot water basically. But its easy to halve this amount if you can find a halfsized bottle of the rum you want to use.
Tools
A stove, and frying pan or skillet on that stoveÂ
A large container
A whisk, egg beater, hand mixer, or immersion blender
A freezer
A filtration method. A pour-over coffee filter&paper filter, a mesh strainer with cheesecloth or muslin, something that can handle pretty fine filtration.Â
A thing to filter it into thats easy to pour with, like a liquid measure cup or a jug
A funnel
Step One: Brown your butter. donât burn it. this will take a while. Cooks on the internet are probably better at explaining browning butter than I am. you just stir it every now and then. or even just swirl the pan. just move the butter as it browns so the milk solids dont stick and burn and it cooks evenly.Â
Step Two: Pour that butter in your rum. Put it in something big. ideally a jar or tupperware. Mix that in vigorously. Really distribute the liquid nutty gold through the other funky liquid gold. To save your arm a hand mixer or immersion blender will help or get your workout in. Akihiko would be proud of your arm strength.Â
Step Three: Freeze that. Note. Try not to accidentally shake it hard when transferring it, which I managed to do, woops. Youâve already distributed the butter through the rum, so youâre just going to make a mess of the top half of your container with little bits of butter sticking to it. I am telling you that this photo is not quite an exemplar because I want to save you from fatwashing forcing you to work harder on dishwashing. Not shaking it will freeze the butter into a consistent puck on top of the rum in a couple hours at most.Â
Step Four: Remove the butter. Again, if you didnât shake it, youâll have less broken up little droplets to deal with but youâll still have some. Youâre going to want to filter it extremely finely -- you donât need to worry about this going bad, the proof takes care of that, there will be a little bit of sediment like basically any home infusion. But you donât want to drink giant lumps of butter. Discard. This is a little bit of a process and will take some time, and you will probably have some spillage. Donât fret none. I went through multiple paper filters here. Just be methodical and you will pull through.Â
We are so close to butterscotchy delicious goodnessÂ
Step Five: Re-bottle it. This is pretty self explanatory. Use a large enough funnel and donât pour it too fast.Â
Iâve only successfully floated liqueurs by pouring them on a spoon that touches the inside of the glass. I know others more experience could just gently poor on the glass itself.